Big gardening maintenance day

I had a lot of catching up to do on weeding and stuff today:

  • Weeded the veggie garden (I still need to create some kind of trellis for the green beans, which are only about 3″ tall so far)
  • Weeded some flowerbeds
  • Mowed the lawn
  • Picked a bunch of cherries from our second tree which is much later than the first tree
  • Picked a big bowl of raspberries
  • Froze some of the berries and cherries for friends who are visiting next month
  • Fertilized the flowerbeds and veggie areas with a 16-16-16 granular fertilizer
  • Applied some Bayer Advanced 2-in-1 Systemic Rose Care fertilizer/pesticide to my simplicity rose hedge. The roses hardly bloomed at all last month, so I trimmed all the green “blind” growth down a bit and I’m trying to get them to bloom well as they grow back in the coming month. I didn’t give them enough extra water this spring to help them avoid aborting all those tiny rosebuds (see my earlier post about this).
  • Tied the growing grape vines up on the sides of the backyard arbor
  • Yesterday, I finished thinning the nectarines. I’m trying to be more aggressive than in past years to ensure bigger, sweeter fruit, but I’m a little late finishing it this year, so I don’t know how much good it will do.

I still have more to do this coming week, including fertilizing the lawn and spraying some pesticide on all the stinking grasshoppers out there! In the flowerbeds, I’ll use some Orthenex to give them systemic protection (kill those darn hoppers when they bite the plants), and in the areas around edible stuff, I’ll probably try Malathion. They’ve been eating the little bean plants a bit.

So, I can’t have a post without a photo, right? Here’s something cool. My friend Rich was visiting this week and decided to play with his Nikon on a slow shutter speed while cranking the zoom. This is actually a ‘Rocket’ Larkspur growing in my front flowerbed. Seems kind of rockety now, doesn’t it?

 

2 thoughts on “Big gardening maintenance day

  1. Oh yeah, nectarines grow very well here. They’re really just a variety of peach, and peaches can handle some pretty cold temps. Now, apricots are a different story. Here, they produce sometimes but often will get their blossoms frozen off because they flower too early. But I don’t even like apricots, so I don’t have an apricot tree.

    Don’t you have any peaches grown around you? I’m sure you could grow nectarines if there are any peaches grown there.

  2. Sounds like you had a productive day!

    I didn’t know that you could grow nectarines in Utah! Do they do well?

    My Mom picked cherries last week too. She gave me a bunch. I’ll be steam juicing them for jelly. I don’t know what variety she has… but they sure are tart!

    Have a great week! Cool photo!

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